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Peer-reviewed veterinary case report

How allergy test sugars affect results in atopic and healthy dogs

By Kasper, Bettina et al.·Published in The Veterinary record·2023·Center of Clinical Veterinary Medicine, Germany·View original on PubMed

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Original publication title: Cross-reactive carbohydrate determinants in atopic and healthy dogs and their influence on allergy test specificity.

Species:
dog

Plain-English summary

A group of 34 dogs with skin allergies (atopic dermatitis) and 10 healthy dogs were studied to see how well allergy tests worked. The researchers found that healthy dogs didn't have certain allergy antibodies, while the allergic dogs showed improved agreement between skin tests and blood tests after blocking these antibodies. This means that treating the allergic dogs in this way helped make the blood tests more accurate. Overall, this approach could help veterinarians choose the right allergens for allergy treatments in dogs with skin problems.

People also search for: dog skin allergies treatment · atopic dermatitis in dogs · allergy testing for dogs

Abstract

BACKGROUND: The selection of allergens for immunotherapy in atopic dogs is often based on serum allergy testing. Cross-reactive carbohydrate determinants (CCDs) are common structures in plant and insect allergens that reportedly induce polysensitisation, reduce agreement between intradermal and serum tests and complicate allergen selection. METHODS: Thirty-four dogs with diagnosed atopic dermatitis and 10 healthy dogs were included in the study. An intradermal test was conducted in atopic dogs, and serum samples from allergic and healthy dogs were analysed for allergen-specific immunoglobulin E (IgE) before and after inhibition of detectable anti-CCD-IgE antibodies. RESULTS: Anti-CCD-IgE antibodies were not found in any of the healthy dogs and no polysensitisation to plant and insect allergens was detected. The agreement between intradermal and serum allergy test results in the atopic dogs with anti-CCD-IgE antibodies improved from slight to fair after blocking the anti-CCD-IgE antibodies. In addition, blocking clearly reduced polysensitisation to plant allergens but not to acarid allergens. LIMITATIONS: Only a limited number of healthy dogs were tested in this study. A gold standard for determining the clinical relevance of IgE sensitisation does not exist. CONCLUSION: Inhibition of anti-CCD-IgE antibodies seems to be of importance to improve serum test specificity for allergen-specific IgE in atopic dogs in relation to intradermal allergy testing.

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Original publication on PubMed: https://pubmed.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/37614212/